May 9, 2008 - 6:26pm

Myers to Kelly: cease and desist

In a matter of weeks, the third district congressional contest has gone from gentlemanly to potentially litigious. 

Candidate Chris Myers took extreme offense today to Republican primary opponent Jack Kelly’s new television advertisement, saying that it is “false and defamatory” and having his lawyer write a scalding letter to Kelly.  Kelly, for his part, said Myers crossed the line with a mailer about him that features a pig wearing a crown. 

Although Myers did not explicitly threaten any legal action, his lawyer, Michael P. Madden, sent a stern letter to Kelly demanding that the commercial be “removed from the air waves immediately.”

The 30-second Kelly spot accuses Myers of “influence peddling” and dolling out “special interest money” on Capitol Hill on behalf of defense contractor Lockheed Martin, where he’s an executive.  The commercial notes thousands of dollars that Lockheed Martin gave in campaign contributions to prominent Democrats like House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and includes a snippet of Myers from a press conference last week saying “that’s part of my job.” 

Madden said that the statement was taken out of context.  Myers, he said, was explaining his job duties, which included speaking to businesses and government officials about how his company’s products work. 

“He never stated that part of his job was making donations,” reads the letter.

The two candidates began their campaigns with a promise to hold a “gentlemanly” contest, but it’s grown especially nasty over the couple weeks.  Kelly’s attack on Myers as a defense contractor lobbyist came in response to Myers’s accusations that Kelly held a patronage job at the South Jersey Transportation Authority that he was unqualified for, taking $71,000 in “waive-out” health care payments when he already was covered from his job as an Ocean County freeholder.

“Our campaign communications taking Jack Kelly to task about his unethical, lucrative patronage jobs at the Atlantic City Airport are 100% factual,” said Myers.  “His TV ad, on the other hand, is a misleading piece of garbage using snippets of video tape purposely twisted to tell a story that simply isn’t true.  Jack Kelly is a sad, desperate career politician who knows his days at the public trough are coming to a close and that’s why he’s resorted to this form of gutter politics.”

Kelly scoffed at Myers’s contention that the advertisement was misleading.

“We’ll run it twice as often since he doesn’t like it,” he said.  “Let him take me to court. I’d love to get him to testify about what he does on Capitol Hill,” said Kelly. 

Kelly said that Myers threw the first punch by insinuating that he didn’t do any work at his job at the SJTA.  The last straw, he said, was a mailer that Myers sent out with the image of a pig wearing a crown that called Kelly a “king.” 

“That’s his interpretation of my public service record,” said Kelly.  “The problem right now is people in this country have lost confidence in the U.S. because of the undue influence of special interest money. And that is what Chris Myers has done with his career.”

 

 

 

Comments

Freeloader Jack Kelly


The Kelly ship is sinking.

When the information is made public that Jack Kelly and Jim Lacey paid (page 15 of the Kelly and Lacey for Freeholder 10-9-07 R-1 Elec report) the former Chairman of the Dover Township Democratic Club, a Democrat that was banned from the federal government and permanently banned from the State of New Jersey for Medicaid fraud/kickbacks, to do some dirty work in their run for Ocean County Freeholder last year, the Kelly ship is going to sink like a rock.

05/09/08 10:36 pm

Asbury Park Press - Again!


Read today's APP Editorial - Kelly truly is a fat pig at the public trough (this is not a comment on his ginormous size - that would be insensitive - but rather a comment on his abuse of the public system for his personal benefit.

Have fun reading - oh and Jack, you may want to get a decent attorney - GIlmore should probably do this for free for you.

New poster child for political taint
MAY 10, 2008
Post a Comment Recommend Print this page E-mail this article
SHARE THIS ARTICLE: Del.icio.us Facebook Digg Reddit Newsvine What’s this?

If there were an Academy Award for political candor, James Crawford, former executive director of the South Jersey Transportation Authority, would merit strong consideration for an Oscar.

Crawford, who hired Ocean County Freeholder John Kelly as an airport analyst at Atlantic City Airport in 1999, admitted this week that it was a patronage hire — one of at least a dozen he made during his 11 years as the authority's chief.

The same candor was not forthcoming from Kelly, who is seeking the Republican nomination for the 3rd Congressional District seat being vacated by Rep. Jim Saxton. Kelly said he had no idea his political connections had anything to do with his landing the job. So much for whatever shred of credibility he had left.

"When I spoke to Jim Crawford, never did he say to me, "This is a patronage job.' " Kelly said. "If I had been told it was a patronage job, I would have said, "No thank you.' I certainly did not say, "I want a patronage job. Will you give me this job?' " He apparently left that to Ocean County Republican Party Chairman George Gilmore, the authority's legal counsel at the time, or to Ocean County Clerk and Stafford Mayor Carl Block, who was an SJTA commissioner. Crawford said it was one of those two who recommended Kelly for the job. Both deny having played a direct role.

Whether you believe their denials or not, one thing is indisputable: Kelly has become the new poster child for all that is wrong with New Jersey politics and the impact the tainted system has on taxpayers. His case has shined the spotlight on how little progress the state has made on political and fiscal reform. It has drawn attention to the need for further pension reform, particularly as it relates to pension padding, for reining in public employee health insurance costs and for reforming the hiring practices of independent authorities.

Kelly got his job at the airport through his political connections. He got the position without it being publicly advertised. In his five years at the airport, he was paid $327,000. He makes $30,000 a year as a freeholder — the most he ever has earned in government, other than during his days at the airport. After his tenure ended at the airport, he retired. His jobs there enabled him to more than double his state pension, which is based on the three highest years of a retiree's salary. Today, Kelly's part-time freeholder salary is supplemented by a pension exceeding $40,000 a year.

It gets worse: Despite having taxpayer-funded health coverage through his job as a freeholder, he is being paid even in retirement for "waiving out" of the SJTA health plan. In 2005, his last year as an SJTA employee, he was paid $13,772 not to enroll in the authority's plan. Since 1999, he has received $71,000 in waive-out payments. During that same period, taxpayers have contributed more than $100,000 toward his health premiums as a freeholder.

Kelly says he has no plans to return any of the waive-out payments or to stop accepting them unless the Legislature acts to make them illegal. Three Burlington County state lawmakers who support Kelly's opponent in the primary, Chris Myers, say they will introduce a bill that would make officials who hold two or more public positions ineligible for waive-out payments. That doesn't go far enough.

No part-time employee should be entitled to any benefits. No full-time public employee should be allowed to enroll in more than one health plan. No public employee should be paid for not enrolling in a health plan if they or their spouse are enrolled in another plan. If their spouse also is a public employee, they should be required to choose one plan. Lawmakers also should take another look at the manner in which pensions are calculated, with an eye toward eliminating pension padding, and pass legislation requiring that all government job openings, including those available at public authorities, be publicly advertised.

In defending his acceptance of waive-out payments, Kelly said they were "hard-earned benefits," warranted by his years of public service. In the end, his greatest service may prove to be inadvertently alerting the public to how much more needs to be done to transform New Jersey's corrupt political culture.

05/10/08 7:52 am

Jack Kelly


Probably a nice person, but essentially unqualified to serve the citizens as our congressional representative. His career is based soley on party loyalty, and while in public service he has not distinquished himself in any meaningful manner. I am nominally a conservative voter, who has supported the GOP candidates, but the system is corrupt and no longer serves the best interests of the people. We require change based on competence and ability, and this race is an opportunity to achieve those goals. It is time to re-order our priorities, and begin to break the self-serving political system that is failing the people of Ocean county.

05/10/08 8:52 am

3rd District Congressional Race. A chance for real change.


Excellent coverage of a race that can be a real opportunity for the voters in Ocean County. Controlled by the republican party political machine, this race offers a real change and one that will serve the people in a positive manner. Those who have followed the coverage of the Kelly/Myers campaign understand that the political system is corrupt, and that competence is not a factor in picking candidates for key jobs. Kelly is not qualified for the position he has been given, and this race provides the people the chance to send a message that this type of politics is no longer acceptable. I have not met either candidate, but see the need for change that is dictated by the voters, not a political machine that will only serve it's own interests.

05/12/08 9:36 am